The Southern Baptist Convention, once founded as a proslavery denomination that aligned itself with the Confederacy, voted on Tuesday to condemn the Civil War battle flag of the South.

‘‘It’s not often that I find myself wiping away tears in a denominational meeting, but I just did,’’ Russell Moore, the prominent evangelical writer who leads the denomination’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, wrote in a blog post after the vote. ‘‘Does this change the game as it applies to the crushing issues of racial injustice around us? Of course it does not. But at the same time, we cannot dismiss this as just about symbols. Symbols matter.’’

The resolution was proposed by Dwight McKissic, a black pastor in Arlington, Texas, who said before the vote on Tuesday that he felt it imperative that the Southern Baptist Convention — the United States’ second-largest religious group, after only Catholicism — make a statement about the flag after the murders in a church in Charleston a year ago.

‘‘You can’t take something that is contaminated and make it innocent. I think to honor those nine people in Charleston that were killed, surely you can repudiate what drove Dylann Roof to kill those folks. You say to the black community, we identify with your pain. We share your pain,’’ McKissic said.

McKissic and the denomination’s president, Dr. Ronnie Floyd, each had said they weren’t sure the resolution would even make it out of committee, let alone pass a vote. Commenters on McKissic’s website responded with defenses of Southern heritage when he announced he had submitted the resolution.

Instead, when the resolution came up for a vote, attendees at the meeting amended the words to make it stronger. Moore said that voters took out a reference to the sense of family history that leads some people to fly the Confederate flag.

And where the resolution committee proposed a draft asking that Southern Baptists ‘‘limit’’ use of the flag and ‘‘consider’’ outright removal, the whole group amended that.

_________________"it takes two sides to end a war but only one to start one. And those who do not have swords may still die upon them." Tolken

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